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black roses question
In article ,
says... I don't know where you saw your red roses but if you want black roses you must plant your black rose where it gets some shade and a rose pushed to the limit of this will deliver the blackest rose. Hhhm... my experience has been that my darkest red roses acquire a blackened shade in the heat of the full summer sun. uhhhh hhhm, you musbe hallucinating. Why do you think yellow roses turn white in the sun? As an analogy. Why won't Peace have any red in it in the full sun, why etc., etc.? there are 2 things you can see in this pic http://www.aoc.nrao.edu/~mstephen/Blkokie.jpg one is the bright summer sun, unquestionably visible; two is the shade the rose sits in. I did absolutely nothing to that pic, it's strictly kodacolor, it's exactly what I saw and what I'll see again. This one grows on the north side of the house, gets a window of sun midday over a 2-story house. If you grow Guinee in the full sun, you'll never see anything approaching blk. A rose can be in the shade while half the bush is in the bright summer sun, no? That'll work too, if your rose is actually big enough to provide some shade. If you want a really black rose, I'd suggest Sfinge. Or Villa Pia. Oklahoma, for one. The only black in the shade I've seen, was on a now dead Black Garnet, with a fatal case of what I can only guess to have been a botrytis or mildew infestation. The entire buds blackened, and the canes quikly fell victim as well. It was only a little shade, as it was near an apple tree, so late afternoon gave it some shade. Dead roses don't count, can't jump. m -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
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